Result for 4A09C4DD1D37B0BD4B441C79A908581250D73C1F

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/xine/README.solaris.gz
FileSize2006
MD545FA99A2120879237AFCE40ED40D4E9E
SHA-14A09C4DD1D37B0BD4B441C79A908581250D73C1F
SHA-2566ABCAAD13531DFCE410A78CED9D28391E677E4D1BDDB47F26EFD0542707360BE
SSDEEP48:Xyb0Icr3xhnNyHmvjvPAIyaZYkxSbRLGcBnM6hW:agXnNyHmL3ZdSNrBn30
TLSHT1B5410A176D04DCCF4E7CFFA89FE3DAA868C69225584C5B06BAF00DD1346453B6A9C9E0
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize106218
MD58D01FA6C8200A9A46DAF7987C8A716CA
PackageDescriptionthe xine video player library, development packages This contains development files (headers, documentation and the like) for the xine library (libxine). . Libxine provides the complete infrastructure for a video/media player. It supports MPEG 1/2 and some AVI and Quicktime videos out of the box, so you can use it to play DVDs, (S)VCDs and most video files out there. It supports network streams, subtitles and even mp3 files. It's extensible to your heart's content via plugins for audio_out, video_out, input media, demuxers (stream types), audio/video and subtitle codecs. Building a GUI (or text based) frontend around this should be quite easy. The xine-ui package provides one for your convenience, so you can just start watching your VCDs ;-)
PackageMaintainerSiggi Langauf <siggi@debian.org>
PackageNamelibxine-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.0-1ubuntu3
SHA-1FF52519E5145631CEBE28AC1BC0ABAE16CDD5117
SHA-256ACC2CE589FA7A013CAC71525468736CCE00792C7943F6ABF799378BDD42E9F1F